VB–G RAM G
In December 2025, the Lok Sabha witnessed the introduction of a new and ambitious legislation—the Viksit Bharat–Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission (Gramin) Bill, 2025, commonly referred to as VB-G RAM G Bill.
This Bill seeks to replace the long-standing Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, 2005 (MGNREGA) and align rural employment policy with India’s long-term vision of Viksit Bharat 2047.
Think of it not merely as a change in scheme design, but as a shift in philosophy—from short-term wage support to development-linked rural transformation.
Understanding MGNREGA (The Foundation)
Before judging the new Bill, we must clearly understand what MGNREGA stood for.
MGNREGA is a rights-based, demand-driven employment guarantee law. Its core promise is simple yet powerful:
Any rural household demanding work must be given at least 100 days of unskilled manual employment in a year.
Key Features of MGNREGA
- Legal entitlement: Employment is a right, not charity.
- Demand-driven: Work is provided on request.
- Decentralised planning: Implemented through Panchayati Raj Institutions.
- Livelihood security: Reduces poverty and distress migration.
- Asset creation: Water conservation, rural roads, land development.
- Transparency tools: Social audits, job cards, public disclosure.
- Inclusivity: High participation of women and marginalised groups.
So, MGNREGA combined social justice, employment, and grassroots governance.
Why Replace MGNREGA?
The government argues that while MGNREGA ensured survival, India now needs a system that ensures sustainability, productivity, and climate resilience—especially as we move toward 2047.
This thinking forms the background of the VB-G RAM G Bill.
Five Major Changes Proposed in the VB-G RAM G Bill
1️⃣ Employment Guarantee Increased: 100 → 125 Days
- Guaranteed employment rises to 125 days per rural household per year.
- Earlier, “not less than 100 days” was the baseline.
- Extra days under MGNREGA were conditional (drought, tribal areas).
- Now, 125 days becomes the standard entitlement.
📌 Conceptually, this signals expansion—but practical delivery remains the real test.
2️⃣ Agricultural Pause: A New Policy Innovation
- Introduction of a 60-day “agricultural pause” during peak sowing and harvesting.
- States may notify:
- District-wise
- Block-wise
- Agro-climatic zone-wise pauses
🎯 Objective:
Ensure adequate labour availability for agriculture and avoid competition between farm work and public works.
⚠️ Key concern:
This assumes agriculture will absorb labour—which may not hold true for landless labourers.
3️⃣ New Cost-Sharing Formula: 60:40
Under MGNREGA:
- 100% unskilled wages → Centre
- 75% materials → Centre
Under VB-G RAM G:
- Operates as a Centrally Sponsored Scheme (CSS)
- 60:40 Centre–State sharing (general states)
- 90:10 for NE & Himalayan states
- 100% Centre funding for UTs without legislatures
States must also design their own scheme within six months.
📌 This marks a clear fiscal decentralisation—but also fiscal burden.
4️⃣ From Demand-Driven to Budget-Capped: Normative Allocations
This is one of the most critical structural shifts.
- MGNREGA had an open-ended Labour Budget.
- If demand increased (drought, recession), Centre had to fund it.
VB-G RAM G changes this:
- State-wise normative allocations decided by Centre.
- Based on “objective parameters” (yet to be defined).
- Expenditure beyond allocation → State’s responsibility.
⚠️ This raises a fundamental question:
Can a capped budget coexist with a legal right?
5️⃣ Technology-Driven Governance: National Infrastructure Stack
The Bill mandates creation of the Viksit Bharat National Rural Infrastructure Stack.
What does this do?
- All rural works integrated into one national digital framework.
- Alignment with PM Gati Shakti National Master Plan.
- Four focus domains:
- Water security
- Core rural infrastructure
- Livelihood infrastructure
- Disaster mitigation
Governance Tools Introduced
- Biometric attendance
- GPS-based worksite tracking
- AI-based fraud detection
- Weekly public data disclosure
🎯 Aim: Transparency, efficiency, accountability.
⚠️ Risk: Digital exclusion of vulnerable workers.
Key Concerns Raised by Experts
1️⃣ Fiscal Stress on Poor States
States with High rural poverty, Low tax capacity → may struggle under the 60:40 burden, weakening the guarantee.
2️⃣ Rights vs Budget Reality
Normative allocations dilute the rights-based nature of employment.
If funds exhaust, entitlement becomes conditional.
3️⃣ Technology as a Barrier
Biometric failures, poor connectivity, server downtime, fingerprint erosion among manual labourers— all can deny work to eligible beneficiaries.
4️⃣ Agricultural Pause & Labour Vulnerability
Landless workers may face → No MGNREGA work, No agricultural work → leading to income gaps during critical months.
5️⃣ Implementation Gap
Even under MGNREGA:
- Promised: 100 days
- Delivered: 45–55 days on average
This exposes systemic issues of planning, fund flow, and administrative capacity.
Positive Aspects of the Bill
Despite concerns, the Bill addresses long-standing weaknesses:
- Focus on durable & climate-resilient assets
- Integration with national infrastructure planning
- Livelihood infrastructure: markets, warehouses, drying yards
- Weekly wage payments (instead of 15 days)
- Enhanced penalties (up to ₹10,000)
- Special cards for:
- Single women
- Persons with disabilities
- Elderly
- Released bonded labourers
- Transgender persons
📌 This reflects a governance-oriented redesign, not just an employment scheme.
